You can now buy the ultimate 'Star Trek' souvenir: a $5.7 million house

You can now own a large piece of "Star Trek" memorabilia but only if you have $5.7 million to spare.
USA TODAY

Calling all Trekkies: There's a new piece of "Star Trek" memorabilia you can get your hands on, but fair warning – it'll put a sizable dent in your wallet.

A futuristic-looking house featured on "Star Trek: The Next Generation" is now for sale in Malibu, California, and it can be yours if you have $5.7 million to spare.

The listing boasts four "eclectic" bedrooms, 3.5 bathrooms and a "chef-inspired" kitchen. Other perks include an ocean-view terrace, a lavender and rose garden, a "spa-like" bath in the master suite – plus "beautiful emerald stone counter tops."

The house was featured in the third episode of Season 3 of the sci-fi show in 1989, when the USS Enterprise answered a distress call from a seemingly destroyed planet and found the only two survivors living in the house.

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Live long and prosper. The classic "Star Trek" franchise, which has seen more than a dozen movie and TV incarnations over the years, is returning once again. CBS All Access has announced that Patrick Stewart will headline a new "Trek" series for the streaming platform. In honor of this latest version, we look back at the many incarnations of the groundbreaking sci-fi franchise over the years. Here, an image from the series that started it all in 1966. PARAMOUNT PICTURES

The series returned to TV in 1987 (after a brief run as an animated show from 1973-74) with "Star Trek: The Next Generation." Patrick Stewart left an indelible mark on pop culture as Captain Picard. ELLIOT MARKS/PARAMOUNT PICTURES

The franchise completely rebooted with director J.J. Abrams' 2009 movie "Star Trek," which recast characters from the original series and shook up the timeline. INDUSTRIAL LIGHT & MAGIC/PARAMOUNT PICTURES

The franchise spun off a CBS All Access series in 2017, "Star Trek: Discovery." It's set in 2256, 10 years before the events of the original TV series. Michael Burnham (Sonequa Martin-Green) is first officer of the USS Shenzhou. JAMES DIMMOCK/CBS